Individual differences in behavioral and cardiovascular reactivity to emotive stimuli and their relationship to cognitive flexibility in a primate model of trait anxiety.

High trait anxiety is a risk factor for the development of anxiety disorders. Like the disorders themselves high trait anxiety has marked phenotypic variation at the level of symptomatology and neural circuits, suggesting that there may be different symptoms and distinct neural circuits associated w...

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Main Authors: Yoshiro eShiba, Andrea M. Santangelo, Katrin eBraesicke, Carmen eAgustín-Pavón, Gemma eCockcroft, Mark eHaggard, Angela C. Roberts
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00137/full
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spelling doaj-4ec5794567424afca332ec38cda3849c2020-11-24T22:38:47ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience1662-51532014-04-01810.3389/fnbeh.2014.0013787732Individual differences in behavioral and cardiovascular reactivity to emotive stimuli and their relationship to cognitive flexibility in a primate model of trait anxiety.Yoshiro eShiba0Yoshiro eShiba1Andrea M. Santangelo2Andrea M. Santangelo3Katrin eBraesicke4Katrin eBraesicke5Carmen eAgustín-Pavón6Carmen eAgustín-Pavón7Gemma eCockcroft8Gemma eCockcroft9Mark eHaggard10Angela C. Roberts11Angela C. Roberts12University of CambridgeUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of CambridgeHigh trait anxiety is a risk factor for the development of anxiety disorders. Like the disorders themselves high trait anxiety has marked phenotypic variation at the level of symptomatology and neural circuits, suggesting that there may be different symptoms and distinct neural circuits associated with risk for these disorders. To address these issues, it is essential to develop reliable animal models of trait anxiety in a non-human primate whose brain bears structural and functional similarity to humans. The present study investigated individual variation in responsivity to fearful and anxiety provoking stimuli in the common marmoset monkey. Seven out of 27 animals failed to display discriminative, conditioned cardiovascular and behavioral responses on an auditory fear discrimination task, similar to that seen in high anxious humans and rodents. Their heightened emotionality to a rubber snake was consistent with the hypothesis that they were high in trait-like anxiety. Evidence for phenotypic variation in the high anxiety group was provided by the finding that discrimination failure was predicted early in conditioning by either hyper-vigilant scanning to the cues or a reduction in blood pressure to the context, i.e. test apparatus. Given that high trait anxiety in humans can be associated with altered prefrontal cognitive functioning and previously we implicated the marmoset anterior orbitofrontal (antOFC) and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (vlPFC) in negative emotion regulation, we also tested the marmosets on two tests of cognitive flexibility differentially dependent on these two regions. While the high anxious group did not differ overall in their perseverative performance, the two distinct phenotypes were differentially correlated with reduced perseverative responding on the OFC- and vlPFC-dependent flexibility tests. Together, this study provides a new model of trait anxiety in marmosets amenable to analysis of phenotypic variation and neural circuitry.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00137/fullAnxietyAnxiety DisordersBlood PressureCognitionConditioning (Psychology)Discrimination Learning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yoshiro eShiba
Yoshiro eShiba
Andrea M. Santangelo
Andrea M. Santangelo
Katrin eBraesicke
Katrin eBraesicke
Carmen eAgustín-Pavón
Carmen eAgustín-Pavón
Gemma eCockcroft
Gemma eCockcroft
Mark eHaggard
Angela C. Roberts
Angela C. Roberts
spellingShingle Yoshiro eShiba
Yoshiro eShiba
Andrea M. Santangelo
Andrea M. Santangelo
Katrin eBraesicke
Katrin eBraesicke
Carmen eAgustín-Pavón
Carmen eAgustín-Pavón
Gemma eCockcroft
Gemma eCockcroft
Mark eHaggard
Angela C. Roberts
Angela C. Roberts
Individual differences in behavioral and cardiovascular reactivity to emotive stimuli and their relationship to cognitive flexibility in a primate model of trait anxiety.
Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
Anxiety
Anxiety Disorders
Blood Pressure
Cognition
Conditioning (Psychology)
Discrimination Learning
author_facet Yoshiro eShiba
Yoshiro eShiba
Andrea M. Santangelo
Andrea M. Santangelo
Katrin eBraesicke
Katrin eBraesicke
Carmen eAgustín-Pavón
Carmen eAgustín-Pavón
Gemma eCockcroft
Gemma eCockcroft
Mark eHaggard
Angela C. Roberts
Angela C. Roberts
author_sort Yoshiro eShiba
title Individual differences in behavioral and cardiovascular reactivity to emotive stimuli and their relationship to cognitive flexibility in a primate model of trait anxiety.
title_short Individual differences in behavioral and cardiovascular reactivity to emotive stimuli and their relationship to cognitive flexibility in a primate model of trait anxiety.
title_full Individual differences in behavioral and cardiovascular reactivity to emotive stimuli and their relationship to cognitive flexibility in a primate model of trait anxiety.
title_fullStr Individual differences in behavioral and cardiovascular reactivity to emotive stimuli and their relationship to cognitive flexibility in a primate model of trait anxiety.
title_full_unstemmed Individual differences in behavioral and cardiovascular reactivity to emotive stimuli and their relationship to cognitive flexibility in a primate model of trait anxiety.
title_sort individual differences in behavioral and cardiovascular reactivity to emotive stimuli and their relationship to cognitive flexibility in a primate model of trait anxiety.
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
issn 1662-5153
publishDate 2014-04-01
description High trait anxiety is a risk factor for the development of anxiety disorders. Like the disorders themselves high trait anxiety has marked phenotypic variation at the level of symptomatology and neural circuits, suggesting that there may be different symptoms and distinct neural circuits associated with risk for these disorders. To address these issues, it is essential to develop reliable animal models of trait anxiety in a non-human primate whose brain bears structural and functional similarity to humans. The present study investigated individual variation in responsivity to fearful and anxiety provoking stimuli in the common marmoset monkey. Seven out of 27 animals failed to display discriminative, conditioned cardiovascular and behavioral responses on an auditory fear discrimination task, similar to that seen in high anxious humans and rodents. Their heightened emotionality to a rubber snake was consistent with the hypothesis that they were high in trait-like anxiety. Evidence for phenotypic variation in the high anxiety group was provided by the finding that discrimination failure was predicted early in conditioning by either hyper-vigilant scanning to the cues or a reduction in blood pressure to the context, i.e. test apparatus. Given that high trait anxiety in humans can be associated with altered prefrontal cognitive functioning and previously we implicated the marmoset anterior orbitofrontal (antOFC) and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (vlPFC) in negative emotion regulation, we also tested the marmosets on two tests of cognitive flexibility differentially dependent on these two regions. While the high anxious group did not differ overall in their perseverative performance, the two distinct phenotypes were differentially correlated with reduced perseverative responding on the OFC- and vlPFC-dependent flexibility tests. Together, this study provides a new model of trait anxiety in marmosets amenable to analysis of phenotypic variation and neural circuitry.
topic Anxiety
Anxiety Disorders
Blood Pressure
Cognition
Conditioning (Psychology)
Discrimination Learning
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00137/full
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